Success in business often comes from ruthless efficiency and aggressive tactics. Rehan Azhar’s approach is different, rooted in faith principles and a human-centered philosophy that treats employees, partners, and communities as stakeholders rather than resources to be exploited.
The Foundation: Conservative Hiring as Competitive Advantage
One of the most distinctive aspects of Rehan Azhar’s business philosophy is his conservative approach to hiring. “My co-founder and I were very conservative with hiring because we did not want to ruin anyone’s career or anyone’s livelihood,” he explained.
This stands in stark contrast to Silicon Valley’s typical growth playbook, which emphasizes rapid hiring to capture market share, often followed by equally rapid layoffs when conditions change. For Azhar and his co-founder Dr. Omar Osman, every hiring decision carried moral weight—they were taking responsibility for someone’s livelihood and career trajectory.
This philosophy created several advantages. CRC could train each employee thoroughly, building deep expertise rather than superficial coverage. The company avoided the cultural dilution that comes from rapid expansion. And it maintained flexibility to weather challenges without resorting to painful layoffs.
Most importantly, it created trust. Employees knew their jobs were secure as long as they performed well, creating loyalty and reducing the constant resume-updating that plagues
high-turnover startups.
Don’t Be the Smartest Person in the Room
Despite his impressive credentials—Northwestern University, L.E.K. Consulting, Airbnb, successful exit—Rehan Azhar embraces the principle that leaders should hire people smarter than themselves. “They say don’t be the smartest person in the room, and we tried to hire the smartest people we could,” he noted.
This requires genuine humility. Many founders feel threatened by exceptionally talented employees, worrying about being overshadowed or losing control. Azhar viewed brilliant employees differently—as force multipliers who could achieve things he couldn’t.
The ability to trust others with important responsibilities distinguishes mature leaders from those stuck in founder mode. Azhar acknowledged this progression, comparing it to parents learning that their children don’t need them as much as they age. “As the company grew, we learned to kind of give responsibility, and as we saw people doing things better than we could, it felt really great.”
The Babysitter Analogy: Incentives Matter
Azhar uses a telling analogy when discussing delegation: “It’s kind of like a babysitter. They’re just not going to do it as good of a job as a parent because the incentives are not the same.”
This recognition of incentive structures reflects sophisticated thinking about motivation. Employees, no matter how dedicated, don’t have the same financial and emotional stakes as founders. Rather than viewing this as a deficiency, Azhar structured CRC to align incentives wherever possible, ensuring that what was good for the company was also good for individual team members.
This might mean equity compensation, performance bonuses, or simply clear career progression paths. The key was acknowledging that motivation matters and building systems that channeled people’s natural self-interest toward collective success.
The Loan That Defined a Culture
One story captures Azhar’s approach to human-centered business better than any abstract principle. An employee needed a loan for a home down payment—a significant sum that traditional banks wouldn’t provide without extensive documentation and approval processes.
“We just fronted him the money because we trusted him and we thought… he was a great employee. Why not? We had the money, we could do it. It was a big deal for him,” Azhar recalled.
This wasn’t a structured employee benefit or a policy rolled out company-wide. It was a human response to a specific situation. The employee needed help, the company had resources, and trust existed. Simple.
Acts like this create cultures that can’t be replicated by competitors with better funding or fancier benefits packages. They demonstrate that leadership sees employees as whole human beings with lives, dreams, and challenges beyond their work responsibilities.
Faith and Business: The Alignment Thesis
Rehan Azhar argues that Islamic principles and sound business practices are deeply aligned, not in tension. “I think there’s a lot of business principles and faith principles that really align,” he explained. “Be honest, be in good spirit, good faith. When you negotiate, don’t take advantage of people, treat them well.”
This isn’t unique to Islam—most faith traditions emphasize similar principles. What’s notable is Azhar’s insistence that these aren’t handicaps in business but advantages. Companies built on trust and fair dealing create sustainable value. Those built on exploitation might succeed temporarily but eventually face reckoning in the form of regulatory action, reputation damage, or simply losing access to talent and partners.
The emphasis on giving back also reflects faith principles. “When you give, God gives you more 1,000 fold over,” Azhar noted, describing a belief common across religious traditions that generosity creates abundance rather than scarcity.
The Childhood Memory: Refusing the Envelope
A formative memory reveals the roots of Azhar’s giving philosophy. As a child volunteering at a fundraising dinner at his local mosque, he worked hard all day. At the end, an uncle gave him an envelope containing $100.
“My gut reaction was like, why are you giving me this? Take it back. I don’t want it,” Azhar recalled. The uncle was stunned—other kids had happily accepted similar payments for their volunteer work.
This instinctive rejection of payment for community service reflects a worldview where contribution itself is the reward, where money can’t be the primary motivator for meaningful work. That 12- or 13-year-old’s reaction foreshadowed the adult entrepreneur who would structure his business around principles rather than pure profit maximization.
Building a Plane While Flying It
Azhar uses a vivid metaphor for the startup experience: “Building a company is building a plane while it’s taking off.” The image captures the simultaneous excitement and terror of entrepreneurship—you’re figuring out fundamental systems while the pressure to perform increases daily.
This experience shaped his empathy for other founders and his approach to angel investing through AirAngels. According to his LinkedIn profile, he’s invested in numerous startups, bringing not just capital but understanding of what founders endure.
The plane-building metaphor also explains his conservative hiring approach. If you’re already building while flying, adding people too quickly is like expanding the plane mid-flight without a clear plan—potentially catastrophic rather than helpful.
The Post-Exit Depression: When Success Feels Empty
One of Azhar’s most honest revelations concerns the emotional aftermath of selling CRC. Despite achieving what most entrepreneurs dream of—a successful exit after just 39 months—he experienced what he described as “a depressive state” about his purpose and direction.
“As the company matures and grows, it needs you less and less, just like a kid needs their parent less and less, and you feel this emptiness and this sadness of wait, this is bigger than me now and I’m not as important,” he explained.
This candor about the psychological cost of success is rare among business leaders, who typically project confidence and satisfaction. Azhar’s willingness to discuss these challenges reflects both emotional maturity and a desire to help other founders prepare for the complex feelings that accompany major transitions.
The period after an exit, even a successful one, requires rebuilding identity and purpose. For founders whose entire lives have been consumed by their companies, this transition can be as challenging as the business itself.
Defining Success: The Evolution
Azhar’s definition of success has evolved dramatically from his early career. “When I first started, I defined success by title and net worth,” he admitted. He maintained a net worth tracker, constantly monitoring progress toward financial goals. Job interviews focused on title—director, VP—because titles signaled status and accomplishment.
Post-exit, his framework changed completely. “Now I define success by health, by relationships and by faith. Those are the three things that you’ll carry with you in life and beyond.”
This evolution isn’t uncommon among people who achieve financial success, but Azhar reached this realization remarkably young. Most people spend decades chasing external markers of success before recognizing that health, relationships, and meaning matter more.
The shift also reflects practical experience. His company exit provided financial security, removing the pressure to optimize for wealth accumulation. This freedom allowed him to focus on questions of purpose and impact rather than just survival and achievement.
The Political Parallel: Government as Startup
Azhar’s recent political engagement—particularly his fundraising for Zohran Mamdani—reflects his belief that business principles apply to governance. “Running a small city is no different than disrupting an industry with your startup,” he argued.
Both require understanding stakeholders (customers/constituents), identifying inefficiencies (competitor practices/existing government systems), and implementing better solutions. The execution challenges differ, but the strategic thinking is similar.
This perspective has led Azhar to seriously consider his own political future. Rather than viewing government as a foreign world, he sees it as another operational challenge where the right combination of systems thinking, stakeholder engagement, and principled leadership can create meaningful improvement.
The Ultimate Integration: Business, Faith, and Impact
What distinguishes Rehan Azhar’s approach is the integration of seemingly separate domains—business success, religious faith, and social impact—into a coherent philosophy. Rather than compartmentalizing these aspects of life, he allows each to inform the others.
Faith principles guide business decisions. Business success funds philanthropic impact. Philanthropic work informs political engagement. Political understanding shapes future business opportunities. Each domain reinforces the others rather than competing for time and attention.
This integration explains how Azhar achieved so much in just 39 months with CRC. When your business model aligns with your values, when your success enables your giving, and when your various activities reinforce rather than conflict with each other, you create compounding returns across all domains of life.

